Shareholder will vote no on Smithfield sale

One of Smithfield Foods Inc.’s largest shareholders says it plans to vote against the pork producer’s proposed takeover by China’s largest meat producer because it wants more time to seek other offers that would provide greater shareholder value.

By:
Michael Felberbaum, Associated Press

RICHMOND, Va. — One of Smithfield Foods Inc.’s largest shareholders says it plans to vote against the pork producer’s proposed takeover by China’s largest meat producer because it wants more time to seek other offers that would provide greater shareholder value.

New York-based investment firm Starboard Value LP, which owns about 5.7 percent of Smithfield’s common stock, sent a letter to the Smithfield, Va.-based company’s shareholders saying it intends to vote against the deal struck with Shuanghui International Holdings Ltd. at a scheduled Sept. 24 meeting in Richmond.

The same day, Shuanghui announced that it has secured about $4 billion in financing for the deal in which Smithfield will sell itself for $34 per share, or $4.7 billion.

The deal, which is expected to close by the end of the year, would be the largest takeover of a U.S. company by a Chinese firm, valued at about $7.1 billion including debt. It still requires approval of the federal Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, which reviews overseas transactions for national-security implications. Smithfield’s stock will no longer be publicly traded once the deal closes.

Smithfield has promoted the deal as opening the door to substantial increases in exports to China, but critics have voiced worry about persistent problems with food safety in China.

In the letter, Starboard says it has received written interest from other parties to buy Smithfield’s assets at a higher value than being offered under the current proposal. While the firm has come “quite a long way,” it needs more time to put the alternative proposal together. Starboard says it hopes its vote will compel Smithfield to delay the shareholder meeting so that it can have more time.

Starboard sent a letter to Smithfield’s board of directors in June, saying the proposed deal falls short of what the company would be worth if sold off piece by piece. The investment firm estimated the company’s value at $9 billion to $10.8 billion, or about $44 to $55 per share.

Starboard says that while the deal with Shuanghui does offer some value, shareholders would be better served if the company focused on selling its various divisions, which include fresh pork and hog production businesses, as well as an international division. Smithfield, whose brands include Armour, Farmland and its namesake, also has been focusing on its packaged meats business, which sells deli meats, bacon, sausage, and hot dogs.

Because Smithfield is contractually prohibited from superior offers or contacting others who may be interested in acquiring parts of the company, the investment firm sought to find other buyers.